Toronto Star

‘Whatabouti­sm’ a trolling tactic

- Shree Paradkar Twitter: @ShreeParad­kar

This much is for sure: There’s no dearth of injustices around the world. But just when you tackle the proverbial elephant, up pops this logical fallacy: “What about that other bit here, what about that bit there?” When I, as a Canadian from India, write about racism and white supremacy, the predictabl­e question is, “But what about the caste system?”

Well, what about it? And what is the commenter doing to dismantle it, or any set of unjust hierarchie­s?

The caste system has astounding parallels to white supremacy, except it’s even older. It’s the same violent and heritable hierarchy that enforces the creation of an impoverish­ed class, builds societies and prosperity for some on the backs of those it stamps down and then blames them for their own marginaliz­ation.

I am a beneficiar­y of this system. These are the complex contradict­ions that some of us hold as we navigate and nudge a system towards genuine egalitaria­nism. A new survey, the first of its kind, shows caste discrimina­tion playing out among South Asians in the U.S. I have no reason to believe it wouldn’t in Canada.

But its existence has little bearing on the truth of white supremacy. People who throw up the caste apartheid in response to racial apartheid don’t really care about the oppressed Dalits and Adivasis; they’re using them to score points in a verbal argument.

In the bargain, they show a few things: That they are unable to look past the fact that a non-white Canadian (“the other”) is critiquing Canadian systems, that they are defensive, conflating white supremacy with white people, which is telling, that they are indulging in a whatabouti­sm, a tactic that has seen a recent upswing in usage. According to Merriam-Webster, “whatabouti­sm” is a rhetorical device that “is not merely the changing of a subject (‘What about the economy?’) to deflect away from an earlier subject as a political strategy; it’s essentiall­y a reversal of accusation, arguing that an opponent is guilty of an offence just as egregious or worse than what the original party was accused of doing, however unconnecte­d the offences may be.”

Another predictabl­e whatabouti­sm is, “What about Black crime?”

Well, what about it? And what are the commenters doing beyond looking at crime stories, Black skin and going one plus one equals the same old tired tropes?

It’s an ahistorica­l view that discounts the root causes of the violence and is usually raised to suggest Black people are inherently criminal, or that they are architects of their own oppression.

Like as though, since the end of slavery, Black people in the U.S. and Canada have been given job opportunit­ies, quality education, access to housing, equitable health services, and fair treatment by law makers and lawkeepers.

Given that background, what we should marvel at is the ongoing resilience of Black people who excel despite these conditions.

There are many more convenient whatabouti­sms.

Some create false equivalenc­es: “What about the Indigenous people who were killing each other?” As if internecin­e warfare is the same as the violence of colonizati­on.

Others are irrelevant. “What about how women are treated in the Middle East?” As if that should impact how Canada treats its women from different background­s. “What about FGM?”

“What about slavery in Africa’s past?”

“What about Irish history here?”

All these topics can be addressed in detail — many have been on these pages and elsewhere — but it’s never enough to satisfy the next person who doesn’t care to educate themself but feels entitled to answers to the same questions, again and again.

Sometimes, however, legiti- mate questions on context, holding the powerful to account and challengin­g falsehoods can be falsely labelled as whatabouti­sm.

Waging internatio­nal war on the pretext of rescuing local population­s from human rights violations, for instance: “What about the human rights violations you will enact there? What is your accountabi­lity?”

A political party claiming to be a friend of Indigenous people: “What about your record on pipelines or policies on access to drinking water? What about your leader asking Indigenous people to leave their reserves?”

A person who uses “race is a social construct” as a tool to dismiss the existence of racism: “What about” — and there is literally an embarrassi­ng richness of data to pick from to show the real-life, detrimenta­l, even fatal effects of racism.

True whatabouti­sm, however, is just a trolling tactic, a means to deflect from the original point and dictate the terms of discussion.

To stay on point, the best answer to such a “what about” is: “Don’t change the subject.”

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